
China Perspectives 2007/2 | 2007 Hong Kong. Ten Years Later Art and culture: Hong Kong or the creation of a collective memory Gérard Henry Édition électronique URL : http://journals.openedition.org/chinaperspectives/1763 DOI : 10.4000/chinaperspectives.1763 ISSN : 1996-4617 Éditeur Centre d'étude français sur la Chine contemporaine Édition imprimée Date de publication : 15 avril 2007 ISSN : 2070-3449 Référence électronique Gérard Henry, « Art and culture: Hong Kong or the creation of a collective memory », China Perspectives [En ligne], 2007/2 | 2007, mis en ligne le 08 avril 2008, consulté le 28 octobre 2019. URL : http:// journals.openedition.org/chinaperspectives/1763 ; DOI : 10.4000/chinaperspectives.1763 © All rights reserved Special feature s e Art and Culture: Hong Kong v i a t c n i or the Creation of a e h p s c Collective Memory r e p GÉRARD HENRY iscussion of art and culture in Hong Kong naturally The Second World War and the threat of the Japanese leads to questions concerning Hong Kong’s cultural brought an end to this peaceful situation, as the city became Didentity, which was the main theme of the cultural a zone of migration, a port of refuge and passage for people debates that preceded and followed the transfer of heading towards other horizons. Occupied by the Japanese, sovereignty to China. “Identity,” in this context, refers to the the city again went on to become a port of destination for a sum of values, practices and customs shared by an entire significant migration from the mainland after the proclama - population. Questioning cultural identity is not specific to tion of the People’s Republic of China. From this point on, Hong Kong and generally becomes an issue whenever a it was physically and culturally cut off from mainland China country or a people feel threatened or overwhelmed by a and was incorporated into a regime of “free trade.” The period of disruption and confusion. Chinese cultural identity city’s identity was grounded in the overriding aim of export - as a whole has continually been put into question throughout ing all that was Made in Hong Kong to markets around the its confrontation with Western civilization ((1) . In Hong Kong, world while the fundamental desire of most of its large immi - the question of identity, explored primarily within artistic grant population was to survive, to secure housing, to raise and cultural circles, has resulted in a recreation of the past children. While art in the sense of artistic production devel - and a larger debate over the necessity to reconstitute oped slowly, people in Hong Kong created their own popu - collective memory in order to affirm the city’s identity better lar culture, a way of living that was different from that of the in the face of an uncertain future. mainland, with its own leisure activities, and especially its own music and film culture that eventually spread through - A specific culture under threat out much of Asia. The emergence of this identity through the culture of everyday life was documented in a landmark For Hong Kong, the great shake-up came with the exhibit curated by Matthew Turner and Oscar Ho of the announcement in 1984 of the plan to hand the territory over Hong Kong Art Centre in 1993 called “Hong Kong Sixties, to China. While a major political disruption, the handover Designing Identity ((2) .” promised to be even more of a social and cultural upheaval In 1984, the initial reaction in Hong Kong to the planned since it was not a matter of decolonisation in the traditional handover to China was relatively free of anxiety as Deng sense but of a transformation from a liberal colonial regime Xiaoping’s series of reforms seemed promising. But the to a communist regime, one that was completely foreign to events of Tiananmen in 1989 hit Hong Kong like a lighten - the younger generations while familiar to a significant part of ing bolt and prompted thousands of people to take to the the elder generation that had fled that regime and sought streets, something most of the protesters had never done refuge under British colonial protection. Nor was it possible before. The slightest rumour and every threat from up north for Hong Kong to return to its pre-colonial culture since before the arrival of the British in 1841, Hong Kong had been little more than a collection of fishing villages, even if 1. See on this subject Werner Meissner, “China’s Search for Cultural and National there had been a few settlements during the Song Dynasty. Identity,” China Perspectives, nº 68, September-December 2006, pp. 41-54. For many years the city was a commercial and military port, 2. Hong Kong Sixties, Designing Identity, illustrated catalogue , 175 pp., edited by a trading post where Europeans and Chinese conducted Matthew Turner and Irene Ngnan, 1993, Hong Kong Arts Centre. Comprising numerous analytical texts by Matthew Turner, Oscar Ho, Terence Lo and Philippe business. Robertson. 79 N o 2007/2 Special feature s e caused tremors throughout the city and set off, during the placed behind glass, venerated as if it were Hong Kong’s v i a t final months, an effervescence that seemed to accelerate, as new bible. It was a space that precluded both self-determi - c n i time seemed to telescope towards the fateful date. nation and escape. In an exhibit called Ac.cul.turation e h p This apprehension was made visible in the work of the plas - Wong Shun Kit, one of the leaders of the association, pre - s c r tic artist Oscar Ho, who set out to record through drawings sented his vision of post-handover Hong Kong with a little e and short texts compiled in an illustrated journal he called map of the city’s labyrinthine streets through which a tiny p Stories around Town the social and political events, cus - humanoid robot, the Hong Konger, wandered while domi - toms, legends, random news items, and oddities that cap - nated by three giants: tured the attention of people in Hong Kong at that time. One of these drawings, Brotherhood with the Triads, resur - These three giants are the three symptoms of an rects an infamous statement by the Chinese minister of secu - authoritarian political power: destruction, develop - rity that among the gangsters of the triads there were true ment, discipline. In this sense, China is unstable, patriots, a statement that rattled the residents of Hong what face it will present is unknown ((5) . Kong. Another piece deals with a strange illness affecting the residents of Tuen Mun: “A boulder on the back of the Another installation, called “Floating Identity,” captured the people is growing to the point that it is crushing them to city’s anxiety concerning 1997. It consisted of a small map of death. In the face of this terrible misfortune, the government Hong Kong beneath a sky full of foreign flags and little has decided to keep all information confidential.” human-shaped kites fluttering about looking for somewhere In a parallel series called Happy Hong Kong, Ho uses small to land. Should one stay or emigrate to another country? drawings of people in pursuit of life’s pleasures –betting on Artists asked themselves the same question. Some, like horses and frantically having sex –to denounce the contempt Raphael Chan, felt like orphans: with which Beijing perceives the residents of Hong Kong: Hong Kong seemed to be like a 100-year old One of the most disturbing things is to hear the orphaned infant, incapable of remembering the face Chinese government repeat over and over again: of its parents. It could speak many foreign languages “Hey, people of Hong Kong, don’t worry, after 97 but had completely forgotten its mother tongue […] you will be able to continue dancing and betting on and now it was to return home but it feared losing horses!” As if dancing (meaning prostitution), bet - its freedom for within the larger family there were ting, and money were the only intellectual or cultur - many rules, limits on free speech and no disobeying al or spiritual values in Hong Kong ((3) . the elders. During the years preceding the handover, it was a group of This fear of the future was summed up in Victoria Harbor young artists, the Young Artists Association, that most Wedding Banquet, a theatre piece created by Tang Shu explicitly sketched the framework within which Hong Kong Wing in January 1997 in which he explored the passage society was evolving ((4) . In an installation titled “Red Water from solitude to conjugal life, the intrusion of one person Zone, 1995” Tsang Wai Hang placed a basin of red water into another’s universe which, the author said, “mirrored the with an electric motor in the middle of a sand pile and in the political universe of Hong Kong and China, a marriage red water a traditional junk turned round and round. In arranged by the parents ((6) .” Censorship, freedom of speech, another installation, “Transition Space, 1995,” Kum Chi problems linked to colonialism, cultural differences between Keng used the symbol of a bird flying from one cage to Hong Kong and the mainland are the most recurring themes another. The image recalled a similar one by Hong Kong’s of the most political artists of this era, but they were not most famous political cartoonist, Zunzi, who, in July 1984, drew a picture of a duck being pushed with a stick out of one cage through a wire tunnel towards another cage where the 3. “Oscar Ho, Apocalypse ou fin d’un monde?”, Paroles , nº 130, December 1994, pp.
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